Are Irrigation Canals Public Access Points?

@Deez Nutz you’re the second person I’ve heard say that about wading to an otherwise landlocked piece of public. But you’re allowed to take a boat down the same river and it’s legal to get to that landlocked piece? I’d love to argue that in court. If it’s a navigable river legal to public access via the high water mark, id love to see the language that says no wading only boating.
I was referring to streams that aren’t classified as “navigable” waters. If it is a “navigable” body of water you can legally access the public to hunt. If it is not “navigable”, it is still legal use the waterway if you stay below the high water mark, but only for water based activities. Gay, I know.

Any property directly adjacent to a navigable body of water is fair game to use for whatever the regs allow. But if it is not considered “navigable” then you are only allowed water based activities, and @BuzzH that doesn’t mean you can “fish” your way to a parcel, hunt for the day, and then “fish” your way back out. I’ve asked the governing agencies specifically that, multiple times concerning multiple different situations.
 
I was referring to streams that aren’t classified as “navigable” waters. If it is a “navigable” body of water you can legally access the public to hunt. If it is not “navigable”, it is still legal use the waterway if you stay below the high water mark, but only for water based activities. Gay, I know.

Any property directly adjacent to a navigable body of water is fair game to use for whatever the regs allow. But if it is not considered “navigable” then you are only allowed water based activities, and @BuzzH that doesn’t mean you can “fish” your way to a parcel, hunt for the day, and then “fish” your way back out. I’ve asked the governing agencies specifically that, multiple times concerning multiple different situations.
Whats the definition of navigable?

What statute violation would you be cited for violating?
 
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I was referring to streams that aren’t classified as “navigable” waters. If it is a “navigable” body of water you can legally access the public to hunt. If it is not “navigable”, it is still legal use the waterway if you stay below the high water mark, but only for water based activities. Gay, I know.

Any property directly adjacent to a navigable body of water is fair game to use for whatever the regs allow. But if it is not considered “navigable” then you are only allowed water based activities, and @BuzzH that doesn’t mean you can “fish” your way to a parcel, hunt for the day, and then “fish” your way back out. I’ve asked the governing agencies specifically that, multiple times concerning multiple different situations.
What waterways are considered not navigable?
 
Like I said earlier, I was told it’s gotta have legal ingress and egress, such as watercraft or recreational access points.
 

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